ABSTRACT

Winner of the 2020 European Walter Benjamin Prize, The Revolution is the Emergency Break is a rich discussion of Walter Benjamin’s lesser-known writings by renowned social scientist Michael Löwy. Translated into several languages but available in English for the very first time, Löwy’s book brings together the philosophical, literary, theological and cultural aspects of Benjamin’s writings, including his relation to figures such as Gershom Scholem and Franz Rosenzweig, his interpretation of historical materialism, surrealism, anti-fascism and anarchism, his contribution to understanding capitalism as a religion, and his relevance for Latin America and ecology today. The concept of revolution in his writings – not only the political ones but also those that deal with art, literature or theology, run through the work, connecting the various chapters. The Revolution is the Emergency Break also features four new chapters in this collection. Written in a clear-eyed, accessible language, The Revolution is the Emergency Break is a must-read for researchers, teachers and students interested in the works of this influential German intellectual.

part I|62 pages

Magnetic Fields

chapter 21|12 pages

Capitalism as religion

Walter Benjamin and Max Weber

chapter 2|11 pages

A historical materialism with Romantic splinters

Walter Benjamin and Karl Marx

chapter 3|7 pages

Elective affinities

Walter Benjamin and Gerschom Scholem

chapter 4|12 pages

Messianism against “progress”

Walter Benjamin and Franz Rosenzweig

chapter 5|10 pages

The Romantic dimension

Marcuse and Benjamin

chapter 6|8 pages

Two Marxist dissidents against the ideology of “progress”

Walter Benjamin and José Carlos Mariátegui 1

part II|59 pages

On Revolution

chapter 647|4 pages

The ringing clock

Walter Benjamin's Anarchism

chapter 8|10 pages

Benjamin and surrealism

The story of a revolutionary spell

chapter 9|6 pages

The revolution is the emergency brake

Walter Benjamin's political-ecological currency

chapter 11|6 pages

“Slaughters with chlorazenophenol”

Walter Benjamin's belated reflections on World War I

chapter 13|7 pages

The viewpoint of the vanquished in the history of Latin America

Methodological reflections on the work of Walter Benjamin

chapter 14|12 pages

The city as a strategic place of class confrontation

Uprisings, barricades and the Haussmannization of Paris in the Arcades Project